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Deposition Objections

Provides deposition objection reference under FRCP 30(c)(2) covering form objections, substantive objections, instructions not to answer, and strategy for taking and defending depositions. Use when preparing for depositions, making or responding to objections during testimony, defending witnesses, handling 30(b)(6) corporate representative depositions, or drafting deposition-related motions.

ID: us.litigation.deposition-objections Version: 0.1.0 License: Apache-2.0 Author: CaseMark Language: en Added: 2026-05-27
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Deposition Objections

Quick reference for making, defending, and responding to deposition objections under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Applies to federal practice; verify local rules for state court.

Prerequisites

  1. Identify deposition type: fact witness, expert, or 30(b)(6) corporate representative
  2. Review operative protective orders and court-ordered topic limitations
  3. Confirm applicable privileges and protected communications
  4. Have FRCP 30(c)(2) and 30(d)(3) ready for citation

Core Rules

  • Most objections preserve, not block — witness answers; ruling comes at trial or on motion
  • Concise and non-suggestive — FRCP 30(c)(2) requires objections "stated concisely in a nonargumentative and nonsuggestive manner"
  • Form objections waive if not made — per FRCP 32(d)(3)
  • Instructions not to answer — only 3 valid grounds under FRCP 30(c)(2)

Proper: "Objection, form." / "Objection, leading." / "Objection, assumes facts." Improper (speaking): "Objection, the question is confusing and compound and assumes facts not in evidence." Improper (coaching): "Objection, the witness already told you he doesn't remember that meeting."

Objection Reference Table

Form Objections (waived if not made at deposition)

Objection Phrasing
Compound "Objection, compound."
Leading "Objection, leading."
Assumes facts "Objection, assumes facts."
Vague / Ambiguous "Objection, vague."
Calls for speculation "Objection, speculation."
Calls for narrative "Objection, narrative."
Mischaracterizes testimony "Objection, mischaracterizes the witness's testimony."
Argumentative "Objection, argumentative."
Asked and answered "Objection, asked and answered."
Lacks foundation "Objection, foundation."
Unintelligible "Objection, unintelligible."

Substantive Objections (not waived — preserved for trial)

Objection Phrasing
Relevance "Objection, relevance."
Hearsay "Objection, hearsay."
Privilege "Objection, attorney-client privilege." (specify)
Beyond scope (30(b)(6)) "Objection, beyond the scope of the noticed topics."

Note: Under FRCP 26(b)(1), discovery relevance is broad. Overusing relevance objections appears obstructionist.

Instructions Not to Answer — FRCP 30(c)(2)

Only three valid grounds exist. All others are improper.

Ground 1: Privilege

  1. State objection, identify the privilege on the record
  2. Instruct witness not to answer
  3. State basis (e.g., attorney-client communication for legal advice)
  4. Be prepared to produce privilege log

Q: "What did your attorney advise you about the contract?" Counsel: "Objection, attorney-client privilege. I instruct the witness not to answer. The question seeks communications made for the purpose of obtaining legal advice."

Waiver risk: privilege lost if communication was disclosed or made before unprotected third parties.

Ground 2: Court-Ordered Limitation

  1. Object and cite the specific order (date, docket entry)
  2. Instruct witness not to answer
  3. Offer to present dispute to the court

"Objection. The Court's protective order dated [date] prohibits inquiry into [topic]. I instruct the witness not to answer."

Ground 3: Bad-Faith Termination — FRCP 30(d)(3)

Use only when questioning is harassing, embarrassing, or oppressive enough to warrant termination.

  1. State on the record you are suspending the deposition
  2. Promptly file Rule 30(d)(3) motion for protective order
  3. Be prepared to justify — courts sanction abuse of this provision

"Counsel, your questions have become harassing. I am suspending this deposition to file a motion for protective order under Rule 30(d)(3)."

Invalid Grounds for Instruction Not to Answer

  • Relevance alone — witness answers; object to preserve
  • Embarrassment — unless rising to FRCP 30(d)(3) harassment
  • Harmful answer — cannot block solely because answer hurts your case
  • "I don't know" — witness states that themselves
  • Form defects — witness answers after objection
  • Hearsay — admissibility decided later
  • Beyond scope in non-30(b)(6) depositions

Strategy

Taking Depositions

Situation Action
Meritorious form objection Rephrase for a cleaner record
Meritless objection "The witness may answer" — proceed
Coaching through objections Note on record; raise with court if persistent
Improper instruction not to answer Demand FRCP 30(c)(2) ground; note for court; seek judicial intervention if needed

Defending Depositions

  • Don't over-object — signals importance to witness, appears obstructionist
  • Do object for curable form defects, privilege, mischaracterization, or genuine harassment
  • No speaking objections — adding rationale or context is improper coaching
  • Prepare witness — objections do not signal how to answer; testify from own knowledge

Pre-Deposition Checklist (Defending)

- [ ] Identify form objection triggers (compound, leading, assumes facts, vague, mischaracterization)
- [ ] Map all attorney-client communications at issue
- [ ] Identify work product and other privileges (spousal, medical)
- [ ] Pull operative protective orders; note specific topic limitations
- [ ] Flag confidentiality designations limiting deposition disclosure
- [ ] Set escalation threshold for FRCP 30(d)(3) motion
- [ ] Draft protective order motion if harassment anticipated

Key Authorities

Citation Subject
FRCP 30(c)(2) Objection form; instruction not to answer
FRCP 30(d)(3) Motion to terminate for bad faith
FRCP 32(d)(3) Waiver of form objections
FRE 103, 611 Objections and examination mode
Hall v. Clifton Precision, 150 F.R.D. 525 (E.D. Pa. 1993) Speaking objections and coaching

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